⭐⭐⭐☆☆ (3/5)
Performance in PCSX2? Surprisingly, that wasn’t the main issue. PCSX2 decompresses the ISO on the fly (especially with CHD or zipped formats), so load times can be slightly longer, but gameplay framerates remained stable on my mid-range PC. The bigger issue is – some compressed versions use modified headers or custom ripping methods that cause PCSX2 to crash at specific points, especially during FMV-heavy sequences. pcsx2 games highly compressed
Many “highly compressed” PS2 games floating around forums and archive sites are poorly repacked. Some contain malware warnings from my antivirus (likely false positives due to the repacking tools, but still sketchy). Others simply won’t be recognized by PCSX2 unless you fully extract them – defeating the purpose of compression. ⭐⭐⭐☆☆ (3/5) Performance in PCSX2
I’ve spent the last few weeks testing several “highly compressed” PS2 game packages meant for use with PCSX2, and here’s my honest take. The bigger issue is – some compressed versions
A Mixed Bag – Convenient Storage Saver or Performance Trap?
Great for a quick nostalgia fix on a budget PC or phone, but don’t expect the full original experience. Proceed with caution, scan everything, and keep your original ISOs as a backup.
Here’s the catch. “Highly compressed” usually means the ISO has been stripped of non-essential data – often FMV videos, alternate language tracks, or even background music. I tested God of War II from a “highly compressed” source. The gameplay was intact, but every cutscene was replaced with a silent, pixelated mess. Gran Turismo 4 lost its iconic soundtrack and most of the menu narration.